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Condolence
message on the death of Minister of Information and Publicity: Dr
Tichaona Jokonya
MISA-Zimbabwe
June 13, 2006
The trial of
the directors of the Voice
of the People (VOP) radio station has been postponed to 25 September
2006 after the prosecution indicated that it was not in a position
to proceed with the case because one of its key witnesses was out
of the country.
The trial had
been set for 15 June 2006 at the Harare Magistrates Courts.
The State, however,
applied for a postponement because its key witness, a Mr Muganyura
who is employed by the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ)
was in Switzerland.
Beatrice Mtetwa
who is representing the accused, took issue with the State’s attitude
saying the trial should proceed as scheduled because the prosecution
could call other witnesses. She said the trial magistrate should
note that the State had initially indicated that it would be ready
to go to trial in January 2006 and had shifted that position to
March 2006 and was now seeking for postponement of the trial despite
its earlier assurances.
The State, however,
insisted that it wanted to open the trial by first leading evidence
from Muganyura.
It, however,
turned out that the State could not proceed with the trial because
none of its other witnesses had been subpoenaed to appear in court
at the start of the trial.
Mtetwa told
journalists after the postponement of the trial, that it was "extremely
shocking" that the State had not subpoenaed its other witnesses
to appear in court on 15 June 2006 despite having known that Muganyure
would not be available.
She said the
prejudice and inconvenience against the accused amounted to "persecution"
of human rights activists in Zimbabwe.
VOP directors
David Masunda, Nhlanhla Ngwenya, Lawrence Chibwe, Millie Phiri,
Arnold Tsunga, Isabella Matambanadzo and director John Masuku, are
accused of contravening section 7(1) of the Broadcasting Services
Act Chapter 12:06 as read with Section 6 (a) (b) which prohibits
broadcasting without a licence.
Maria Nyanyiwa,
Nyasha Bosha and Kundai Mugwanda, journalists with the VOP are also
facing similar charges.
Nyanyiwa, Bosha,
and Mugwanda were arrested on 15 December 2005 after the police
raided the VOP offices in Harare confiscating computers, equipment
and administration files.
The trio were
subsequently released without charges after spending four nights
in police custody, but were later subpoenaed to appear in court
on 15 June 2006 when the trial was expected to proceed.
Allegations
are that the accused established an office at Beverly Court in Harare
which they equipped with computers and produced programmes.
The news programmes
were allegedly then dispatched to a transmitter in the Netherlands
from where they were relayed to Madagascar.
The state alleges
that the station in Madagascar then beamed the programmes into Zimbabwe
via short wave.
Visit
the MISA-Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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